Since they were kidnapped nearly two years ago from their school in Chibok, Nigeria, nothing has been heard or seen from the more than 200 girls since.

Until, perhaps, 25 March, when authorities in Cameroon detained a young woman who they say was carrying explosives near the border with Nigeria. The BBC reports that the girl said she was one of the kidnapped girls.

Cameroon has summoned two Nigerians -- one the leader of a Chibok parents' group, and the other the mother of one of the missing girls -- to Cameroon verify the identity of the detained girl.

In the aftermath of the 19 March assassination of Rev. Vincent Machozi in the Democratic Republic of the Congo, Crux columnist John Allen asks whether the definition of "martyr" needs to be expanded.

Machozi, besides being a priest, ran a website that, in Allen's words, documented "collusion among political elites, armed factions, and commercial interests in what he termed the 'Balkanization' of the region in order to exploit its natural resources."

In other words, the 51-year-old Machozi had plenty of enemies.

Even so, Allen writes, he "chose to stay, placing himself willingly in harm’s way, because he believed that’s what God was calling him to do. In other words, his killers’ motives may not have been religious, but his certainly were, and surely that deserves to be part of the picture."

A bomber killed at least 72 people and injured at last 300 more on Easter Sunday in Lahore, Pakistan.

The bomber struck in the Gulshan-i-Iqbal park, which was unusually crowded with families celebrating Easter.

"[T]he terrorist hit a very soft target of women and children," Deputy Inspector General of Operations Haider Ashraf was quoted as saying by Pakistan's Dawn news organisation.

The Tehreek-i-Taliban Pakistan Jamaatul Ahrar claimed responsibility for the killings. It is the same group that said it was responsible for the 2015 twin suicide bombings at churches in Lahore's Youhanabad area, killing 15 people.

A Muslim convert to Christianity who was an active evangelist in northern Bangladesh has been hacked to death by suspected Islamists, local sources told World Watch Monitor.

Hossain Ali, 65, a father of three, was killed on 22 March in Kurigram when he was out walking. Three assailants on motorbikes attacked him with knives, and threw homemade bombs as they fled. Hossain died on the spot from excessive bleeding according to The Daily Star.

When he became a Christian in 1999, Hossain's wife tied him up in their house for three days. His family persecuted him for changing his faith but later became Christians themselves. Before retiring, Hossain was an inspector of family-planning for the government, which, when it found out about his conversion, withheld his salary for a few months.

Police have arrested three people in connection with the murder but refused to identify them. Attacks on Christians in Bangladesh were largely unheard of until July 2014 when a mob of 60 people attacked nuns in a convent in Rangpur. Other recent similar murders include that of a senior pastor, Khaza Somiruddin (aged 75), on 6 January in Jenaidah. Before his death, Somiruddin had reported receiving several threats from Islamic extremists because of his conversion and evangelistic work.

Myanmar’s new President-elect says the appointment of a new ethnic affairs ministry is “vital” for the country’s future.

In his first public address, Htin Kyaw said the ministry would be central to Myanmar’s “peace, development and sustainability”.

Myanmar is made up of eight major ethnic groups, who all hoped for autonomy after the Second World War.

Civil wars have blighted the country since then in its ethnic minority borderlands, involving groups who are majority Christian such as the Kachin and the Karen. Around 240,000 people have been displaced, mostly in the northern state of Kachin, where fighting between the army and rebels continues.

At least 15 people are feared killed in a fresh attack attributed to suspected Fulani herdsmen in Nigeria's central Benue state.

On 17 March, unidentified armed men stormed Tombo, in Buruku, killing residents, setting fire to properties and then taking over the deserted villages, an eye-witness told Nigeria’s Vanguard Media.

“As I speak with you, the people are shooting sporadically, and the villagers are fleeing for fear of being killed," he said. "The situation in Tombo at the moment is scary and we are helpless. It’s as if we are in a war situation where the mission of the invaders is to occupy and take over our villages.

“Corpses are littering the community, though one cannot give a specific number of the dead, which should not be less than 15. But I know that the casualty figure could be huge because many have been wounded as bullets continue to fly around.

“The people are also burning down houses, farms and [crops], as they move into the villages, in what looks like a well-coordinated attack.”

The police confirmed the incident occurred at about 3pm on Thursday, but said that seven people had been killed.

The House of Representative's announcement put public pressure on the White House to step up its fight against the terrorist group. It will also give momentum to humanitarian advocates arguing for a more welcoming refugee policy.

ISIS has released a video purporting to show its religious police burning hundreds of Christian books, according to Mail Online.

The video footage shows a militant throwing pamphlets, bearing a cross on the front cover, onto a bonfire. It was posted on 13 March by its news agency, Amaq, with the title: "Diwan of education destroys Christian instruction books in Mosul".

The Diwan Al-Hisba – or Chamber of Morality Police – was set up by ISIS soon after seizing swathes of territory in Iraq and Syria in June 2014, and is responsible for enforcing Sharia.

In February 2014 it destroyed about 10,000 books and more than 700 rare manuscripts when it blew up Mosul's main library.

Despite President Muhammadu Buhari’s victory claims, Boko Haram is still holding territory in northern Nigeria, said the head of the U.S. Africa Command (USAFRICOM).

Gen. David Rodriguez’s assertion comes almost two months after Buhari told the Secretary-General of the United Nations, Ban Ki Moon, that the terrorist group was no longer “holding any territory as we speak.”

Speaking on Tuesday (9 Mar.) before the U.S. Senate Armed Services Committee, Gen. Rodriguez said: “Boko Haram does hold some significant territory in northern Nigeria, as do Al-Shabaab in limited areas of Somalia.”

The current offensive against Boko Haram, led by the Nigerian military in partnership with Chad, Cameroon, and Niger under the Multinational National Joint Task Force (MNTJF), has routed the group from territories it controlled and significantly degraded its capabilities.

Late last month the Nigerian government announced the re-opening of major roads in Borno State, closed for three years, and encouraged people in the northeast who fled Boko Haram attacks to return to their homes, despite concerns over the safety of some of the more remote rural areas.

Gen. Rodriguez praised MNJTF allies and partners such as the African Union, France, UK, EU and U.S. Department of State for engaging in the counter-Boko Haram effort.

“Our engagement now can assist our African partners in realising their potential and gaining the capability to solve African problems,” Gen. Rodriguez said. “African solutions to African problems are, in the long run, in the best interest of Africans, Americans, and indeed the world.”

The US has deployed 300 forces to support intelligence, surveillance and reconnaissance operations in Cameroon, and has pledged to support Nigeria via security assistance programmes, including the new Security Governance Initiative, the Global Security Contingency Fund, and the Counter-Terrorism Partnership Fund.

The U.S. has recently provided communications gear and equipment to Nigeria, including a recent delivery of 24 mine-resistant, ambush-protected vehicles.

For the seventh straight year, India has refused to let U.S. observers into its country to report on religious freedom.

India denied visas to the delegation of the U.S. Commission on International Religious Freedom on 3 March, the commission said. The USCIRF is an advisory body to the U.S. president and the Congress. Its reports on religious freedom in various countries are meant to help guide U.S. diplomacy. In its most recent annual report, USCIRF says India "has long struggled to protect minority religious communities or provide justice when crimes occur, which perpetuates a climate of impunity."

USCIRF will try again next year, George said, "given the ongoing reports from religious communities, civil society groups and NGOs that the conditions for religious freedom in India have been deteriorating since 2014."

The Indian Embassy in Washington was quick to respond with its own statement: "We do not see [the standing] of a foreign entity like USCIRF to pass its judgment and comment on the state of Indian citizens' constitutionally protected rights," the embassy said. It said the Indian constitution "guarantees fundamental rights to all its citizens, including the right to freedom of religion."

To which U.S. State Department spokesman John Kirby replied: "We want issues like that, that are enshrined in a constitution, to be upheld, to be observed."

Militants of the radical Islamist group ADF-Nalu group enjoy complicity in the Democratic Republic of Congo on the part of “uncontrolled elements of Ugandan army and security forces”. This was affirmed in a statement following a meeting of “Social Dialogue on the persisting presence of ADF and allies in the area of Beni”, promoted by a local Study Centre for the promotion of peace, democracy and human rights (CEPADHO by its French acronym). ADF-NALU, originally rooted in a rebel movement to overthrow Uganda’s government and replace it with an Islamist fundamentalist state, but forced to re-locate over the border into DRC, has been carrying out murders of local people, far from the attention of major media. Attacks, including murder, looting, abduction and rape, are carried out on an almost weekly basis in the Beni area, a predominantly Christian region, as is most of the DRC.

“We deplore, on the basis of numerous witnesses, the presence of Islamist elements coming from various parts of east African countries (Somalia, Kenya, Tanzania, Uganda, Rwanda, Chad, South Sudan, Burundi),” said the statement.

“We are certain that the activity of ADF in DR Congo could soon diminish, were the direct or indirect support it has hitherto enjoyed to cease.”

Local bishops have repeatedly denounced the resurgence of violence still carried out in the name of ADF-NALU, but which now takes the form of a jihadist organization called Muslim Defense International (MDI).

The statement calls on the international community to investigate massacres in that area of the DRC and to verify charges that injured ADF members were admitted to Ugandan hospitals.

A well-known Christian rights lawyer who tried to help prevent a wave of church cross removals by Chinese authorities has appeared on state television confessing to crimes after a months-long disappearance - the latest case in China's widening crackdown on Christians.

On a news programme on state-controlled Wenzhou TV on 25 Feb., Zhang Kai confessed to encouraging Christians to come together to "protect their rights" after the authorities removed crosses from churches.

The mostly Christian city of Wenzhou, in the eastern province of Zhejiang, was the site of protests in 2014 over a government campaign to demolish crosses.

US State Department spokesman Mark Toner said: "Such confessions are counter to the standards of a rule-of-law society ... We urge China to release Zhang and others detained for seeking to peacefully uphold the freedom of religion guaranteed in China's constitution."

Zhang was detained shortly before a planned meeting in August 2015 with David Saperstein, the US ambassador for international religious freedom, who was visiting China.

China continues to be the largest producer of Bibles in the world, thanks to the Amity Printing Company in Nanjing.

Twelve million copies came off Amity's presses in 2015, the majority for export. The company stated in a press release that it has the capacity to print 20 million Bibles each year. Its Bibles are exported to more than 70 countries and printed in 90 languages. A report in 2013 said that 4 million copies were sold in China, but questioned whether this kept up with demand. According to Pew Research, there are at least 68 million Christians in China.

Amity's first print-run used a press donated by UK-based United Bible Societies, which remains a joint partner in their business. The company marked its 20th year by moving to bigger premises in 2008 that now employ 600 people. Amity is China's only official printer of Bibles.

Church leaders in India have condemned as a "gross injustice" the government's decision to offer job quotas, usually reserved for more disadvantaged castes, to the relatively wealthy Jat community.

The federal government agreed on 21 Feb. to introduce a Jat quota bill at their March assembly, after violent demonstrations across Haryana state in northern India, when at least 30 died as the dominant Jat agricultural caste protested about job quotas. The decline of farming had led to the Jats demanding a reinstatement of their "backward" status to secure more jobs. They were categorised as Other Backward Caste in 2014, but in 2015 India's Supreme Court reversed the decision.

The move will give the Jats a bigger share of jobs in the education and government sectors.

Father Anand Muttungal, founder of the National Christian Forum, said Christians are "systematically being sidelined" from benefiting from federal and state government quotas meant for minority communities.

He said that more than 100,000 student scholarships were intended for Christians in the central state of Madhya Pradesh, but Christians received only around 3,000. "And those numbers were acquired with great difficulty," he added.

The Forum's national president, Sujit William, said the government has "made such regulations that it is almost impossible for Christians to benefit from them".

Father Savari Muthu of the Delhi Archdiocese said of the Jat demonstrations: "This proves that with muscle power, you can do anything. Giving reservation to such an influential class is a gross injustice to people who really deserve these special rights."

Indian 24 million Christians (2.3 per cent of the population) come second to the Muslim minority at 14 per cent and 1.2 billion.

A US student held in North Korea since early January was detained for trying to steal an item bearing a propaganda slogan from his Pyongyang hotel and has confessed to "severe crimes" against the state, says Reuters.

Otto Warmbier, 21, a student at the University of Virginia, was detained before boarding his flight to China.

The BBC Seoul correspondent said that the North Korean judge was considering the highest possible sentence, and that Warmbier sounded "clearly upset".

North Korea has a history of detaining foreigners and later making a public display of their "confessions", as in the case of Korean Canadian pastor, Hyeun-soo Lim who was recently sentenced to life in prison following an admission in a Pyongyang church of committing crimes against the state.

At a news conference in Pyongyang, Warmbier said a "deaconess" of his Friendship United Methodist Church in Ohio had promised to give him a used car worth $10,000 if he brought back a propaganda sign from his North Korea trip. However, the senior pastor at the church in Wyoming, Ohio, told CNN that he did not know the person identified by Warmbier as a deaconess there, and said Warmbier was not a member of the congregation.

North Korea has, for the 14th consecutive year, been considered the most difficult place in the world to be a Christian, according to the 2016 Open Doors World Watch List.

A group of Christians in Iraq has formed its own militia to defend themselves against the so-called Islamic State, says the BBC.

The Babylon Brigade of the Iraq Christian Resistance, headquartered in Baghdad, is the only Christian militia among about 30 Shia and Sunni Muslim outfits that have sprung up over the last few years. Between them they have around 100,000 armed volunteers.

When construction crews building a shopping centre in Gaza unearthed the ruins of what appeared to be a Byzantine church about 1,500 years old, local authorities did not halt the work to preserve the site. Instead, bulldozers continued in early April to prepare the site, wiping away the traces of the church, according to Fides.

Rev. Ibrahim Nairouz, a Palestinian Anglican priest in Nablus, sent a letter of protest to Palestinian Authority Prime Minister Rami Hamdallah, and to the Palestinian minister of antiquities, Rula Maavah. "If they had found the remains of a mosque or a synagogue, or any other ancient structure, would they have handled the situation in the same way?" he wrote, according to accounts in the Israeli media.

Uganda’s government intends to follow Kenya’s lead in demanding the registration of so-called FBOs (Faith-Based Organisations), a plan strongly contested by various Christian denominations.

“If what we are doing is good, then why should we be registered? Why should a faith that has been in existence for centuries need an operation license?” Mgr. John Baptist Kauta, Secretary General of the Uganda Episcopal Conference, asked, describing the government initiative as “suspicious”.

Mgr. Kauta said that scrutiny was required to uncover the government’s real intentions.

Bishop Macleord Baker Ochola, member of the Acholi Religious Leaders Peace Initiative (ARLPI) in Uganda, said he wondered how a 30-year-old government could regulate religions that have been in existence for centuries.

“Why should a child tell a father how to lead a family? We have been here for decades. What is the logic behind registering well known religions?” he said.

But Rev. Canon Aaron Mwesigye, director of religious affairs in the President’s Office, said the policy would increase collaboration between the government and FBOs, helping the government to deal with religious disputes and corruption.

Nearly two months after the invasion of Agatu by Fulani herdsmen, more than 10 villages are still under siege by rampaging Fulani insurgents, according to Chief Elias Ekoyi Obekpa, traditional ruler of the Idoma tribe in Benue State, Nigeria.

The villages still under siege share boundaries with Nasarawa State and the Gwer-West Local Government Area in Benue.

The monarch, who was addressing Benue State Governor Samuel Ortom during his visit to the ravaged communities on Tuesday, 5 April, declared that the menace of the Fulani herdsmen had turned into a real insurgency, beyond simply herder-farmer clashes.

Despite a deployment of military officers to Agatu, Obekpa noted that although many displaced people were now eager to return home, they cannot do so, for fear of the herders.

According to a staff representative of Open Doors, a charity that supports Christians under pressure for their faith, those who were left behind are desperate - so desperate that they almost attacked a team trying to give them relief aid.

“The pastors there said it was all a result of their situation - no food, no support and people dying in the camp due to lack of food. We thought we were going to give emergency relief to about 50 people, but suddenly over a thousand people showed up,” a worker on the ground said.

The Och’Idoma urged Governor Ortom to ensure soldiers and other security operatives are deployed in areas under siege, as well as communities where villagers are yet to return.

Islamic State’s apparent loss of Qaryatain comes in the wake of the government’s recapture last week of the ancient city of Palmyra, 60 miles to the east of Qaryatain.

Apart from its strategic position, Qaryatain - with under 50,000 inhabitants - was known for its historic 5th-Century Syriac monastery of Mor (St.) Elian the Hermit. Two of its priors had already been kidnapped by Islamists: in July 2013, Father Paolo Dall’Oglio (an Italian, still apparently being held), and his replacement, Syriac Catholic Jacques Murad, kidnapped on May 21 as Islamic State over-ran Palmyra.

Hundreds of Christians, both Syriac-Orthodox and Catholic, were taken captive - including at least 60 sheltering in the monastery - when Qaryatain fell to IS in August 2015. Islamic State bulldozed the monastery two weeks after it took control of it.

Two indications that Fr. Mourad was still alive came in short videos in late August. In one, filmed in a conference room in Qaryatain, Fr. Mourad was among some 50 Christian men ordered to sign a dhimma (contract) to avoid death. (In a second, broadcast on a Lebanese Christian network, Fr. Mourad spoke directly to the camera.)

After being forced to pay jizya (Islamic "protection money") and pledging to submit to their captors’ demands of subservience to Muslim rule, many Qaryatain Christians were later released.

Justin Welby said to Bp. Angaelos, in presenting the Lambeth Cross for Ecumenism, “My encounter with Orthodoxy through you has been a really profound experience ... It has changed much of my understanding of what the Church is universally. I have never had that much engagement with Orthodoxy, and certainly not with Coptic Orthodoxy. I found a completely different understanding, a much deeper sense of being drawn into the Body of Christ, and this is a recognition of the importance of your role in presenting to the UK and to the Church that we belong to one another in Christ.”

Bishop Angaelos welcomed “working with ... the Anglican Communion worldwide to advocate for others … It comes at a time at which we must stand together. It is time for us to speak collaboratively and powerfully. It is only by the world seeing us standing together and witnessing that what we have in common is more than what separates us, that it realises that we have common ground, especially for those who are not so privileged as we are to speak…

“At a time of increasing challenge and darkness, when there appears to be no hope, and those who threaten us appear to be stronger, our hope and strength lies well and truly in our unity, in our shared vision, and in our commitment to do what we can, not only for ourselves but for the world around us.”

Adherents of the Coptic Church are the largest contingent of Christians remaining in the Middle East, where Christians have been subject to continued pressures, including rampant violence forcing large numbers out of their ancestral lands in places like Iraq and Syria.

The leader of Ansaru jihadist group, a Boko Haram splinter group, known for kidnapping foreigners and attacks against Christians, has been arrested.

A military spokesman said Khalid al-Barnawi was captured in Lokoja, capital of the central Nigerian state of Kogi.

"Security agents made a breakthrough on Friday in the fight against terrorism by arresting Khalid al-Barnawi, the leader of Ansaru terrorist group in Lokoja," military spokesman Brigadier General Rabe Abubakar said.

"He is among those on top of the list of our wanted terrorists."

The US had placed a $5m (£3.5m) bounty on his head after branding him one of three Nigerian "specially designated global terrorists" in 2012.

Ideologically aligned to al-Qaeda in the Islamic Maghreb (AQIM), Ansaru disapproves of what it sees as Boko Haram’s indiscriminate bombing and shooting campaign, preferring instead high profile killings and attacks on Western interests.

On 29 March, Catching Our Eye reported that a teen-aged girl, detained in Cameroon when authorities discovered she was carrying explosives, claimed she was one of the nearly 300 girls kidnapped two years ago from her school in Chibok, Nigeria. Today, the BBC is reporting that Nigerian officials say the girl is not a Chibok kidnapping victim. The report does not indicate the girl's actual circumstances.

The Lahore bombing on Easter Sunday that killed at least 70 is part of a wider struggle against extremism in Pakistan, explains a British correspondent for Lapidomedia.

He was in the country during what he calls an Easter 'weekend of madness'; it also saw 25,000 hard-line Islamic protestors march on parliament to demand, amongst other things, the execution of all Christians - like Asia Bibi - held on blasphemy charges.

'As we drove home from Easter Sunday celebrations we could hear the chanting: thousands of people in the heart of Pakistan’s capital city demanding that the government institute a policy of ethnic cleansing,' he reports.

Pakistan's prime minister, Nawaz Sharif ordered swift action on terrorists, like the Taliban splinter group Jamaat-ul-Ahrar which says it carried out the Easter bombing. Today (Tues) dozens of arrests have been made, and arms caches seized.

An Assyrian Christian girl taken hostage 13 months ago by Islamic State (IS) militants in northeast Syria‘s Hassaka province has been set free after “intense negotiations” for her release.

Miriam David Talya, who had been captured with more than 250 other Khabur villagers in Feb. 2015, arrived in Tel Tamar village on Mar. 27.

The girl’s name had been listed to be returned with the final group of Christian hostages released last month. But when she was not included with the group, the Assyrian Church of the East began confidential negotiations with her captors to obtain her release.

Another Assyrian girl who had been captured in the Khabur River raids is still being held by the jihadists. The church was informed that she had been married to a high-ranking IS official and would never be released.

IS forces continue to hold another 179 Assyrian Christians captured in August 2015 in the Syrian town of Qaryatain.

“It’s very likely that [Abu Sayyaf] will declare a satellite of the caliphate in the coming year,” Rohan Gunaratna, an international terrorism expert at S. Rajaratnam School of Security Studies in Singapore, told Time. “Once that is done, it will be much more difficult to dismantle these groups.

“Recent arrests in Malaysia and Indonesia clearly show that a new terror attack from ISIS in the region is imminent. And the next one will be bloodier.”

Meanwhile, the Philippine Star reports: “In the southern Philippines, we have jihadists pushing to advance their particular umma [Muslim community]; separatists pushing for autonomy of varying degrees, up to and including full independence; Communist proponents of protracted armed struggle aimed at eventually causing the state to wither away entirely; pre-Hispanic sultanates claiming various territorial rights; right down to rido – clan disputes over property or seeking to avenge past wrongs.”

Long after Boko Haram has gone, she said, the insurgents will leave behind in some communities 'a dense cloud of internecine hatred and suspicion'.

Nwaubani visited Michika in the north-eastern state of Adamawa to see at first hand a joint initiative by the American University of Nigeria and the Adamawa Peace Initiative to reduce violence and build peace through collaboration between local religious, community and business leaders.

The mixed Christian-Muslim population of Michika had always managed to live in peace despite some tensions, she writes. Since Boko Haram arrived, however, all that has changed with Christians and Muslims now at loggerheads.

But the initiative has brought tensions into the open. 'We had been carrying these grudges instead of tabling them,' a man said. 'We had been pretending as if they did not exist.'

Dozens are feared killed in fresh attacks on Monday 11 April, 2016, by suspected Fulani militants on several villages in the Gashak area of the Nigerian central state of Taraba.

Local media report that at least 44 have been killed (though the exact number of casualties is yet to be confirmed), with a number of houses and domestic animals burnt to ashes.

An unknown number of people have reportedly fled to neighbouring Cameroon, as well as nearby local council areas.

The incident was confirmed by Police Public Relations Officer Joseph Kwaji. “It is true that there was an attack by the herdsmen, but for now I don’t have the full details of the crisis, so I cannot tell you the number of casualties now,” he said.

Recent attacks by Fulani herdsmen have left hundreds dead and led thousands to flee from the largely Christian areas of Benue and Taraba States, which form part of Nigeria’s farming belt.

Such attacks have features long familiar to Nigerians: ethnic Fulani cattle herders, largely Muslim, moving in on farmers, largely Christian.

The long-running land conflict is frequently framed in economic terms, but it also has distinctive religious contours.

The Syriac Orthodox Patriarch said some died while trying to escape, while others were killed for breaking the terms of their "dhimmi contracts", which required them to submit to the rule of Islam.

Three women were among those killed, Aphrem added, during his visit to Qaryatain (60km west of Palmyra, and 92km southeast of Homs).

“We have seen the destruction wrought, and the hate that visited such destruction on a holy place,” said the Patriarch during his visit on 8 April.

The town’s historic monastery (named after St. Eliane, who was martyred in 284 A.D. for refusing to renounce Christianity) suffered widespread destruction, including of its church, which was gutted, and of the 5th-century shrine, which was badly damaged.

Relics were visible among the rubble; Christian symbols were trashed and crosses removed.

“Life may not be easy the first few weeks or months in Qaryatain, but having the returnees back will significantly restore normality,” said Aphrem, quoted by Syrian state media.

Hundreds of Christians were taken captive when Qaryatain fell to IS. After pledging to submit to their captors’ demands of subservience to Muslim rule, many Qaryatain Christians were later released.

However, the jihadists are thought to still be holding 179 Christians taken from this one Syrian town alone.

Two St. Eliane Monastery priors had already been kidnapped by Islamists.

Fr. Paolo Dall’Oglio was kidnapped in July 2013. The Italian is still apparently being held, while his replacement, Syriac Catholic Jacques Murad, was kidnapped in May 2015, but escaped in October.

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